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The Chicago Architecture Foundation launches openhousechicago

The CAF offers special access to sites in the Loop, Bronzeville, Little Village, Garfield Park and Rogers Park.

By Lauren Weinberg
Published: August 31, 2011

openhousechicago: photo gallery
Emil Bach House, Chicago.
Park Gables, Chicago.
Interior of the Fisher Building, Chicago.
Interior of Del Prado Apartments, Chicago.
Interior of Del Prado Apartments, Chicago.
Welcome Inn Manor, Chicago.
Christy Webber Landscapes, Chicago.
Santa Fe Building, Chicago.
The original Sears Tower, now the Homan Square Foundation.
Corpus Christi Church, Chicago.
Downtown Islamic Center, Chicago.
Uncommon Ground roof garden, Chicago.
Interior of Atelier Jouvence, Chicago.
Little Black Pearl, Chicago.
Apollo's 2000 Theater, Chicago.
Crown Fountain, Millennium Park, Chicago.
  • Emil Bach House, Chicago.

    Emil Bach House, Chicago.

    Photo: Caroline Stevens340.ar.openhouse1.jpgEmil Bach House, Chicago.149117531
  • Park Gables, Chicago.

    Park Gables, Chicago.

    Photo: Caroline Stevens340.ar.openhouse3.jpgPark Gables, Chicago.149117412
  • Interior of the Fisher Building, Chicago.

    Interior of the Fisher Building, Chicago.

    Photo: Gregory H. Jenkins Photography340.ar.openhouse17.jpgInterior of the Fisher Building, Chicago.149117393
  • Interior of Del Prado Apartments, Chicago.

    Interior of Del Prado Apartments, Chicago.

    Photo: Caroline Stevens340.ar.openhouse5.jpgInterior of Del Prado Apartments, Chicago.149117334
  • Interior of Del Prado Apartments, Chicago.

    Interior of Del Prado Apartments, Chicago.

    Photo: Caroline Stevens340.ar.openhouse4.jpgInterior of Del Prado Apartments, Chicago.149117455
  • Welcome Inn Manor, Chicago.

    Welcome Inn Manor, Chicago.

    Photo: Bastiaan Bouma340.ar.openhouse12.jpgWelcome Inn Manor, Chicago.149117436
  • Christy Webber Landscapes, Chicago.

    Christy Webber Landscapes, Chicago.

    Photo: Christy Webber Landscapes340.ar.openhouse15.jpgChristy Webber Landscapes, Chicago.149117357
  • Santa Fe Building, Chicago.

    Santa Fe Building, Chicago.

    Photo: Annie Evans / Chicago Architecture Foundation340.ar.openhouse13.jpgSanta Fe Building, Chicago.149117378
  • The original Sears Tower, now the Homan Square Foundation.

    The original Sears Tower, now the Homan Square Foundation.

    340.ar.openhouse6.jpgThe original Sears Tower, now the Homan Square Foundation.149117479
  • Corpus Christi Church, Chicago.

    Corpus Christi Church, Chicago.

    Photo: Caroline Stevens340.ar.openhouse2.jpgCorpus Christi Church, Chicago.1491175110
  • Downtown Islamic Center, Chicago.

    Downtown Islamic Center, Chicago.

    Photo: Chicago Architecture Foundation340.ar.openhouse8.jpgDowntown Islamic Center, Chicago.1491176311
  • Uncommon Ground roof garden, Chicago.

    Uncommon Ground roof garden, Chicago.

    340.ar.openhouse10.jpgUncommon Ground roof garden, Chicago.1491175512
  • Interior of Atelier Jouvence, Chicago.

    Interior of Atelier Jouvence, Chicago.

    Photo: Steven Greiner340.ar.openhouse16.jpgInterior of Atelier Jouvence, Chicago.1491175713
  • Little Black Pearl, Chicago.

    Little Black Pearl, Chicago.

    Photo: Bastiaan Bouma340.ar.openhouse7.jpgLittle Black Pearl, Chicago.1491176114
  • Apollo's 2000 Theater, Chicago.

    Apollo's 2000 Theater, Chicago.

    Photo: Caroline Stevens340.ar.openhouse9.jpgApollo's 2000 Theater, Chicago.1491175915
  • Crown Fountain, Millennium Park, Chicago.

    Crown Fountain, Millennium Park, Chicago.

    Photo: Courtesy of the Chicago Department of Cultural Affairs and Special Events / the Grant Park Music Festival340.ar.openhouse14.jpgCrown Fountain, Millennium Park, Chicago.1491174916

Emil Bach House, Chicago.

Photo: Caroline Stevens

When the Chicago Architecture Foundation launches openhousechicago October 15 and 16, visitors can tour—for free—a Frank Lloyd Wright house in Rogers Park, the Crown Fountain’s inner workings, Uncommon Ground’s rooftop garden and approximately 120 other local sites that aren’t normally open to the public.

“It’s really a way to reintroduce the city to its own residents,” says OHC managing director Bastiaan Bouma. The sites, which include both obscure gems and beloved landmarks, are concentrated in Bronzeville, Garfield Park, Little Village and Rogers Park, as well as downtown. (A free trolley circulates among each neighborhood’s attractions.)

OHC has two inspirations: the international Open House movement, which began in London in 1992, and the Great Chicago Places and Spaces program, which the former Mayor’s Office of Special Events ran in cooperation with the CAF until 2009. “OHC will be an order of magnitude bigger [than GCPS],” Bouma says. He expects about 50,000 people to participate in the mostly self-guided tours. Here’s a sneak preview of six of OHC’s most intriguing sites:

Christy Webber Landscapes (2900 W Ferdinand St). Christy Webber is best known for its plantings in Millennium Park. The firm’s LEED Platinum–certified headquarters in the West Side “eco-industrial park” Rancho Verde is part of OHC’s Green Trail, which Bouma describes as “a collection of sites connected by their leadership in sustainable design.” Guests can take a behind-the-scenes look at the complex’s planting areas, machinery and green roof.

Del Prado Apartments (5307 S Hyde Park Blvd). Built in 1918, the former Cooper-Carlton Hotel is notable for its gorgeous but un-PC Native American iconography (pictured). Studio Gang Architects is overhauling the building’s rental apartments.

Downtown Islamic Center (231 S State St, fourth floor). High above the bustle of State Street, the DIC, which was founded in 1976, offers Muslims who work or live downtown a place to worship. Visitors can view the center’s skylit prayer rooms.

Emil Bach House (7415 N Sheridan Rd). Frank Lloyd Wright completed this late Prairie-style stunner in 1915. According to Bouma, the Rogers Park home is being restored by billionaire owner James Pritzker’s Tawani Foundation.

Fisher Building (343 S Dearborn St). Daniel Burnham’s chief designer, Charles Atwood, was the driving force behind this 18-story 1896 landmark. The Fisher Building now houses rental apartments; OHC provides access to a floor maintained to recall the structure’s historic heyday as an office tower.

Little Black Pearl Art & Design Center (1060 E 47th St, 773-285-1211). Little Black Pearl in Kenwood hosts art, dance and computer classes for kids and adults in a gorgeous 40,000-square-foot space. The public can tour the South Side nonprofit’s studios, where students learn glassblowing, metalworking and more.

openhousechicago • Various locations • Oct 15 and 16; free

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